David Bowie’s Death Bed Riddle

DAVID Bowie’s unexpected death from cancer at 69 on Monday has inspired many people to look more closely at his final song, Lazarus.

The track’s haunting music video was released just last week, showing Bowie hospital-bound, lying on a deathbed with his eyes bandaged, writhing around and singing about being “free just like that bluebird”.

The opening line of “Look up here, I’m in heaven” has taken on a poignant new meaning following his sad death.

As Bowie writhes around on the bed, trying to break free, another Bowie then appears, a Bowie clad in black and stood upright, a Bowie who can still pose, pout, pick up a pen and create.

Inspiration hits him and he scrawls at speed in a notebook, while the other Bowie continues to convulse.

As he writes, we see a skull sitting ominously on his writing desk, the spectre of death looming over Bowie and his final creation, before he steps backwards into a wooden wardrobe, a fitting kind of coffin for an icon of style and fashion.

Scenes of Bowie frantically writing while clearly heavily tormented are harrowing to watch in the video, which ends with the singer retreating into a wardrobe (his closet/coffin for him and his many costumes) and closing the door behind him, seemingly bidding farewell as death finally comes for him.

The name Lazarus is commonly used in pop culture to refer to the restoration of life and there have been numerous uses of it in art and literature.

Lazarus of Bethany is the subject of one of Jesus’s most prominent miracles in the Bible’s Gospel of John. Lazarus is brought back to life four days after his burial, proving the power of Jesus over humanity’s greatest and most merciless enemy: death.

“This sickness will not end in death,” Jesus tells his followers after learning that Lazarus is ill. “No, it is for God’s glory so that God’s Son may be glorified through it. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies.”

Bowie has been a lifelong Christian. “Just Because I believe, Don’t mean I don’t think as well… Lord, I kneel and offer you my word on a wing” he sang on his 1975 Station to Station album.

And who could forget at the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert in 1992 when he asks the 90,000 audience to kneel with him and recite the Lord’s Prayer.

6 thoughts on “David Bowie’s Death Bed Riddle”

Excellent analysis!
My dark and quite sudden interpretation of the costume connection is: the Man Who Fell to Earth will now be of the earth. The coffin, burial, decomposition. Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Incredibly dark.

I’m also still puzzling over the stripped costume which obviously means something.

In Lazarus I see Bowie withering in the bed and the person underneath the bed who to me, represents death. This person keeps reaching up to touch him but always just misses because he manages to wither in an upward motion each time. I view this as death trying to claim him and he is resisting because he obviously isn’t ready to go yet.

The scene with Bowie writing at the desk represents him committed to finishing “Black Star” before he leaves us. You see him briefly slipping away only to resist because he’s still hasn’t completed his final mission yet.
With Blackstar complete…. He’s ready to go and that’s when he backs into the closet.

Also, verses in the song like “I’ve got scars that can’t be seen”, “Everybody knows me now”……….I think Bowie was worried about what the tabloids might print and what his young daughter may now learn about his past.

This is only my interpretation of Lazarus. I’m still trying to figure out “Blackstar” Which to me is a lot harder to analyze.